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Happy birthday Misha!!!

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Their roles like in the painting 🥺 and my son 😭😭😭😭😭 "soft-spoken, gentle, delicate." and then he grows up into a criminal who rolls his eyes at annoying people at any occasion I love him so much!!!!!!!!

Link to the preview of the scripts thanks to @threemanoperation 🙏
Preview of season 2
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Thank you to everyone who got me to 250 likes! Also thanks to my 8ish followers❤️❤️❤️❤️ love you guys
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"S-shut up"
OH MY GODS HE'S SO CUTE!!!!
I LOVE THAT THEY SHOWED US CAINE BLUSHING 🩷
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Please help us!!
We are trying to start a Mishapocalypse 2.0 on all social media platforms on Misha's birthday (August 20). The image used is the one in this post.
The idea is the same as the first Mishapocalypse; just spam the picture, make edits, make memes, put it as your pfp etc. If you post it, make sure to use #mishapocalypse2 :))
Please spread the word so we can get as many people in on this as possible!!!
Join the community: @misha-pocalypse-2-0-army
Follow @/mishapocalypse2.0 and @/mishapocalyps2.0 on tiktok and/or @/mishapocalypse2_0 on instagram for updates!
Thanks in advance for joining! Let's show the world some Mishamigo power!!


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They're gangle's light omg 😭😭😭

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...Did Mike glance down at their hands touching?
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if byler is endgame literally how am i supposed to go back to school and function like a normal person?? i will never shut up about them, i'll be the most annoying person ever.
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BYLER + LUMAX + JOPPER PARALLELS ||
thinking you lost someone you love...
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It's All Relative:
Mike Wheeler’s bedroom isn’t just queer-coded, it’s politically charged in context — thanks to this print.
Alternative title: Triangles, triangles and more fucking triangles.
The more you look, the clearer it becomes that Mike's bedroom is an absolute masterclass in queer-coded set design.
I probably don’t need to address the famous "one way" sign pointing to the closet — that symbolism should be obvious. However, I do want to focus on the print which has been placed (quite intentionally) beneath it:
Relativity (1953) by M. C. Escher
Relativity is one of Escher’s most recognizable works. It’s a lithograph (originally a woodcut) that depicts a labyrinth of staircases inside a world where the normal laws of gravity do not apply. In fact, it appears to have three centres of gravity occupying the same space.
It plays with dimensions, which is fitting for a show like Stranger Things which is about alternate dimensions. The three gravitational forces could even be referencing the three known dimensions within Stranger Things: The Rightside Up, The Upside Down, and the mysterious Dimension X.
But beyond that, this image also speaks to Mike’s character and psyche. Otherwise, it wouldn't be placed inside his bedroom which represents his personality, privacy, and inner world.
The Meaning of Relativity
Relativity is obviously the state of being relative.
To be relative means that something gains its meaning or significance only when compared to, or understood in relation to, something else.
When you focus on a single point of gravity in Escher’s print, the scene appears normal. But when you assess the image as a whole, you notice that something is off. The three centres of gravity are made interesting when we notice them in relation to each other. That's why it's called Relativity.
Basically, we're being told that if we want to better understand Mike Wheeler, we need to look at him relatively.
We need to pay attention to the context and look at the bigger picture.
Well, you don’t have to tell me twice. Let's zoom back out.
In the bigger picture, the blocking has Mike stood between his bed and the closet. Framed above him is the "one way" sign, and the print of Relativity.
This is our point of interest: the spot our eyes are naturally drawn to.
All Signs Point to The Closet
As it turns out, the “one way” sign is highly relevant to this analysis.
That’s because the perceived significance of the "one way" sign is relative.
On its own, a “one way” sign in Mike’s bedroom is just a traffic sign and nothing more. In relation to the closet, however, it transforms into a visual cue for the state of being “in the closet.”
The symbolism of the “one way” sign depends entirely on its relationship to the closet, and Relativity (1953) underscores that fact with humour and cheeky precision.
It's a slapstick fish-to-the-face for anyone still denying the possibility of Mike being queer. It’s as if the set designers are saying, “Look at the sign in relation to the closet. And just to make sure you see it, here’s Escher’s Relativity sitting right between them to give you instruction.”
It's not even hidden in plain sight — it's being pointed to.
And here’s the kicker: the sign, the print, and the closet aren’t just thematically connected — they are spatially triangulated.
Their relativity is both metaphorical and literal!
It's also queer imagery: Special thanks to costume designer Amy Parris for confirming that the creatives behind Stranger Things are well aware of the triangle’s significance in LGBTQ+ history and symbolism. (More on that later).
The Penrose Triangle (Tragedy)
The triangle imagery becomes even more overt: at the centre of Relativity sits an inverted Penrose triangle, also known as the Penrose tribar or impossible triangle.
An impossible shape is a form that can be drawn, but cannot possibly exist in three-dimensional reality — unless it is an optical illusion. Psychologist Lionel Penrose and his mathematician son Roger Penrose popularised the Penrose triangle in the 1950s, describing it as “impossibility in its purest form”.
It's... actually quite tragic, when you think about it.
The impossible triangle suggests that Mike feels trapped in an unsolvable dilemma — caught between two realities (the two-dimensional and the three-dimensional) — with no way to reconcile them.
That’s because Mike is at the centre of a dysfunctional love triangle:
The two-dimensional reality that only exists within his mind: a romantic union with Will Byers. The three-dimensional reality that exists within real life: a romantic relationship with El Hopper.
But remember, the impossible triangle is an optical illusion — it doesn't actually exist.
Like Relativity, when you assess the bigger picture (rather than focusing on a single point) something about this love triangle is… off.
It’s not just impossible; it’s fake.
In Relativity, the three points of gravity hold equal importance. This mirrors the way Mike, Will, and El each contribute equally to sustaining this phony love triangle.
They’re all either hiding something or being dishonest.
Their dysfunction comes to a head in the Rink-O-Mania scenes, where it is most obvious. It's the crux of the blame-game that even fans can’t resist joining: Who’s the real asshole in this love triangle?
Dustin already gave the most succinct answer long ago: they’re all being little assholes.
But that’s the tragedy, isn’t it?
These aren’t bad people — they're timid teenagers. The impossible triangle isn’t a joke at their expense; it’s a reminder that all three are stuck in a structure that can’t hold.
And Mike isn't the perpetrator; he's just at the heart of it.
That’s why Relativity hangs in his room and not El’s or Will’s: the impossible puzzle is his to solve, because he’s the one with the most to lose. Since the problem with this love triangle is fakery, the only real solution is honesty. Relativity foreshadows that Mike will be the one to break the illusion — to reveal the truth.
The Pink Triangle (Triumph)
Of course, the fact that the triangle in Relativity is inverted is also significant. Maybe not in Escher’s original intention, but certainly for the creators of Stranger Things in relation to Mike Wheeler.
See what I did there?
As Amy Parris has noted, the inverted triangle is queer imagery, because it is linked to the pink triangle.
The pink triangle has a horrific origin:
During the Second World War, it was used in Nazi concentration camps to mark gay men and trans women. At the time, the inversion signified “sexual inversion” — an outdated, offensive term once used to pathologise homosexuality.
Much like the word queer which was used as a slur before being reclaimed by the LGBTQ+ community, the pink triangle (or inverted triangle), was also reappropriated.
It’s now a symbol of pride, gay liberation, and equality.
This reclamation began in the 1970s, sparked by Holocaust survivor Heinz Heger’s memoir The Men with the Pink Triangle. In The Rocky Horror Picture Show (1975), Dr. Frank-N-Furter famously wears a pink triangle over his heart.
I used the word triumph in my subheading with intention, because triumph implies victory over persistent struggle and enduring resilience.
After the Holocaust, the queer community faced another devastating battle: the AIDS epidemic.
The conservative Reagan administration was infamously silent during the crisis’s peak years in the 1980s — and Stranger Things is set squarely within this political backdrop. In this era, the pink triangle’s significance re-emerged, taking on new prominence as a symbol of the ACT UP coalition and the fight against AIDS.
Their slogan?
SILENCE = DEATH
Does this slogan remind you of anything from the show? Because it should. Eddie Munson said something strikingly similar in season 4:
"It's forced conforming... that's what's killing the kids!"
Silence = passivity, compliance and conformity.
This wasn’t just an empowering line to capture the spirit of Stranger Things; it was a direct and intentional reference to the fight against AIDS.
And let’s be clear: Eddie Munson is heavily queer-coded. He appears to have used the hanky code, showed a clear attraction to Steve, and was persecuted by his community during a mass hysteria that mirrored the real-life Satanic Panic.
So Mike Wheeler — a teen growing up in a Reagan-voting household, a member of the Hellfire Club, and one of Eddie Munson’s chosen protégés — keeps a symbol of queer resistance and liberation hanging in his bedroom.
He also wears a custom-made shirt with a triangle over his heart.
Is that significant? Is it intentional?
Well, we have to go back to Escher’s Relativity, which reminds us that it’s all relative: The inverted triangle in the print hanging in Mike’s room, and the triangle over his heart, only gain their full meaning when viewed in context: the bigger picture.
And in Stranger Things, a story about freaks and outcasts beating the odds, that bigger picture is the AIDS crisis: it's right there, providing the backdrop — the context.
Pride is a Riot
Queer liberation is not supposed to be polite or palatable: it’s about breaking down barriers, opening doors, making people uncomfortable, and demanding visibility.
One of the most prominent visual motifs included in season 4 of Stranger Things is the Creel mansion door.
A door — something which opens and reveals the truth inside (like a curtain, a gate, or a closet). Notice that doors, curtains, gates and closets all play a recurring role in Stranger Things; this show has an obsession with metaphors about opening barriers and revealling truths.
Now, the set designers haven’t just suggested that Mike is in the closet, they’ve implied it’s a “one way” destination. He can’t leave. It’s the impossible shape. A locked door. But Robin already demonstrated how we can open a locked door and let the light (truth) in.
By smashing it with a brick — a possible reference to the Stonewall riots.
They didn’t need to include this moment. The door didn’t have to be locked, and Robin didn’t have to be the one throwing the brick. Heck, they could have thrown in a little fanservice and had Steve take off his jacket and punch through the glass with his fist.
Like the “one way” sign, the significance of the brick is relative — relative to its wielder:
Robin Buckley, a canon lesbian who is partially closeted and partially out.
Interestingly, when we look back at Mike Wheeler’s room — and specifically his closet — we can see that the set designers placed a mirror inside.
Mirrors show our reflection; they expose truths and confront us with our reality and identity. In this case, the mirror also catches rays of light streaming from Mike’s window, just like the beams that poured in when Robin’s brick smashed through the Creel mansion door. Light is truth, illumination and exposure.
The Matter of Perspective
We can wax poetic about Escher’s Relativity all day, but its core principle is simple; it’s about perspective.
Is Mike Wheeler queer-coded?
Well, it's relative. Whether you read Mike as straight or queer depends on your point of view, and your way of seeing the world: Are you sympathetic to the struggles and experiences of queer people? Are you queer yourself and know that experience intimately? Do you see queerness not as an “inversion” of the norm, but as an equally valid expression?
If the answer to any of these is yes, then you probably interpret Mike as queer due to your perspective.
I don’t at all begrudge those who simply aren’t familiar with queer-coding — but I do detest those who refuse to see it, or see it and choose to deny it.
Because silence is death.
Mike’s sexuality needs to be both recognized and canonized, because overt queer representation matters. It doesn't matter if it makes Them™️ uncomfortable — queer lives matter more than stupid respectability politics.
Stranger Things has already been catering to Them™️ by watering down the narrative: keeping Mike hidden behind the curtain, and in the closet.
I don’t mind because I love a riddle, but we’re heading into the final season now. The endgame.
The curtain has to open. The door needs to be smashed. But will they do it? That likely depends on the perspective of the Stranger Things creators themselves. So, what is their perspective? What is the ethos that drives the show's storytelling?
For the answer, we can turn to David Harbour's SAG Awards speech (edited for brevity):
“This award… is a call to arms from our fellow craftsmen and women to go deeper, and through our art to battle against fear, self-centeredness, and exclusivity… and through our craft to cultivate a more empathetic and understanding society by revealing intimate truths… We 1983 Midwesterners will repel bullies, we will shelter freaks and outcasts... we will get past the lies… And when we are at a loss amidst the hypocrisy and the casual violence of certain individuals and institutions we will… punch some people in the face when they seek to destroy the weak, and the disenfranchised, and the marginalized."
And remember the context: a story set in a conservative Midwestern town in the 1980s, in the shadow of the AIDS crisis and the Satanic Panic, where one of the main characters is a canon gay teen in love with his best friend.
I'd say their perspective is pretty fucking clear. 🔺
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and if i say will was also in the wrong for not calling or writing mike
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Me and the 4 other Jonathan stans if he just fucking dies in season 5
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I just finished reading twist and shout and holy sh*t, that's the most I've cried over a fic
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i fear some of you forget that the destiel queerbait went on for TWLEVE (12) years which is why it’s actually not comparable to whatever ship you’re pretending it’s comparable to
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Tumblr Holidays:
• March 14th: Pi Day
• March 15th: Ides of March
• April 1st: April Fools Day and Mishapocalypse Memorial Day
• April 13th: Homestuck Day
• April 20th: Weed Day
• September 8th: Queen Elizabeth Killed By Sans Undertale Day
• November 5th: Destiel Canon Day
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